DEATH AND BURIAL OF EDGAR A. POE

The clergyman, Dr. Snodgrass, who attended the author of “The Raven” in his last sickness, gives the
following account of it in the Woman’s Temperance Paper of this city:

“On a chilly and wet November afternoon I received a note, stating that ‘a man, answering to the name of
Edgar Allen [[Allan]] Poe,’ who claimed to know me, was at a drinking-house in Lombard Street, Baltimore, in a state of deep
intoxication and great destitution. I repaired immediately to the spot. It was an election day. When I entered the bar-room of the
house, I instantly recognized the face of one whom I had often seen and knew well, although it wore an aspect of vacant stupidity which
made me shudder. The intellectual flash of his eye had vanished, or rather had been quenched in the bowl; but the broad, capacious
forehead of the author of ‘The Raven,’ as you have appropriately designated him, was still there, with a width, in the
region of ideality, such as few men have ever possessed. But perhaps I would not have so readily recognized him had I not been notified
of his apparel. His hat — or rather the hat of somebody else, for he had evidently been robbed of his clothing, or cheated in an
exchange — was a cheap palm-leaf one, without a band, and soiled; his coat, of commonest alpacca, and evidently
‘second-hand;’ and his pants of gray-mixed cassimere, dingy and badly fitting. He wore neither vest nor neckcloth, if I
remember aright, while his shirt was sadly crumpled and soiled. He was so utterly stupefied with liquor [column 3:] that I thought it best not to seek recognition or conversation, especially as he was surrounded by a crowd of
drinking men, actuated by idle curiosity rather than sympathy. I immediately ordered a room for him, where he could be comfortable until
I got word to his relatives — for there were several in Baltimore. Just at that moment, one or two of the persons referred to,
getting information of the case, arrived at the spot. They declined to take private care of him, assigning as a reason, that he had been
very abusive and ungrateful on former occasions, when drunk, and advised that he be sent to a hospital. He was accordingly placed in a
coach and conveyed to the Washington College Hospital, and placed under the care of the competent and attentive resident physician of
that institution. So insensible was he, that we had to carry him to the carriage as if a corpse. The muscles of articulation seemed
paralyzed to speechlessness, and mere incoherent mutterings were all that were heard.

“He died in the hospital after some three of four days, during which time he enjoyed only occasional and fitful
seasons of consciousness. His disease, as will have been anticipated, was mania a potu — a disease whose finale is always
fearful in its maniacal manifestations. In one of his more lucid moments, when asked by the physician whether he would like to see his
friends, he exclaimed: ‘Friend! My best friend would be he who would take a pistol and blow out my brains, and thus relieve me of
my agony.’ These were among his last words.

“Now for the manner of his burial:

“The remains of the author of ‘The Raven’ do not ‘lie moldering in a corner of the
Potter’s Field, at Baltimore.’ The truth, as I remarked, is bad enough, and discreditable enough to his relatives,
not to say the city where he died. He was interred in an old Presbyterian burying ground in Green [[Greene]] Street, which has not been
much used for many years. On a portion of it a church has since been erected, but not over his grave. In the removal of the dead, which
will sooner or later take place, it is quite probable the bones of ‘Poor Poe’ will be collected among the remains of the
friendless and the unknown, and removed beyond recognition, for nothing but a couple of pine boards were placed at his grave, in lieu of
grave-stones.”

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Notes:

The Poe Society is indebted to Michael Powell for a color photograph of the original article.